Fox affiliate stations had the highest percentage of minority employees; NBC affiliate stations had the lowest. There were interesting regional differences, too: “Stations in the Northeast and Midwest had minority percentages around half the South and West,” Bob Papper writes in the report.

At Hispanic-focused stations, nearly 90 percent of the workforce identified as Hispanic, up from 84 percent the year before.

The number of minority news directors rose slightly. Generally, Papper writes, “the larger the newsroom staff, the less likely that it was headed by a minority … Among the big four, NBC affiliates were the most likely to have a minority news director … with Fox affiliates lagging way behind the rest.”

Men are still doing great. “As usual, in TV, men outnumber women for all groups except Asian Americans, where women outnumber men almost 2:1,” Papper writes. Women “edged past the 30 percentile mark as TV news directors,” he says, noting that “a slightly smaller percentage of women news directors return the survey compared to men. For whatever the reason, that’s been true every year since I started the census calculation in 2002.”